Thread subject: Diptera.info :: Allacma fusca?

Posted by Robert Heemskerk on 25-06-2006 19:48
#1

Hi forum,

I was wondering if this is Allacma fusca?
Not an adult one, but a juvenile perhabs?
I found it on bark of a tree.

Or what else? :o

greeting, Robert Heemskerk

Posted by Nikita Vikhrev on 25-06-2006 20:26
#2

No Robert it is not Collembola at all.
My test it is most probably Psocoptera.
Nikita
Robert, please, give size and other usefull infirmation, as a result you'll ger more and more precise ID.

Posted by Robert Heemskerk on 25-06-2006 20:32
#3

Hi Nikita,

Size; about 3 mm
I can't find any wing (Psocoptera), but juvenile Psocoptera could be wingless?

Robert, :)

Posted by Nikita Vikhrev on 25-06-2006 20:45
#4

1. In this case it is not Psocoptera also. My best guess is juvenile Gryllidae.
2. By the way. On my site www.Rosfoto.ru on key word "collembola" one can find about 80 images of Collembolas. All images checked by Mikhail Potapov, one of the world Collembola expert, so you can trust all ID.
Nikita

Posted by Nikita Vikhrev on 25-06-2006 20:53
#5

P.S. Thinking about Collembola I excluded Psocoptera.
So, my test:
it is juvenile Gryllidae or less probably Psocoptera.

Posted by Dmitry Gavryushin on 26-06-2006 08:40
#6

Hello Robert,
I would also say it's a bark louse (Psocoptera).

Posted by Jan Willem on 26-06-2006 08:55
#7

Hi Robert,

For your information, there are also several species of Psocoptera that have wingless adults. Just think about the Psocoptera you find indoors.

Jan Willem

Posted by Paul Beuk on 26-06-2006 09:07
#8

It is Psocoptera and I can even tell you it is an adult female of the genus Mesopsocus (Mesopsocidae). This specimen belongs to a group a five closely related species of which only M. unipunctatus was recorded from the Netherlands up to now. The present picture does not permit further identification than this species group (genital structures need to be examined).

Posted by Robert Heemskerk on 17-07-2006 00:01
#9

This evening I found one with wings!

Perhabs this is also Mesopsocus, but another sp.
But they are not totaly different, I see also some similarity.

greeting, robert

Edited by Robert Heemskerk on 17-07-2006 00:02

Posted by Robert Heemskerk on 17-07-2006 00:02
#10

2

Edited by Robert Heemskerk on 17-07-2006 00:03

Posted by Paul Beuk on 17-07-2006 09:14
#11

Ah, well now, this is a different species, and it even belongs to a different family. ;)
This is Psococerastis gibbosa of the family Psocidae. One of the species with very long antennae.

Posted by Robert Heemskerk on 17-07-2006 23:59
#12

Paul knows (almost) everything! :o

thanks a lot!

robert,